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Polycythemia and Hb Coimbra [beta 99 (G1) Asp -> Glu] in Brazil

Abstract

We report the clinical and laboratory findings concerning three unrelated Brazilian patients investigated for polycythemia, whose definitive diagnosis could only be established after the presence of Hb Coimbra (b99 Asp ® Glu) was demonstrated. This illustrates the importance of properly investigating hereditary hemoglobinopathies in cases of erythrocytosis because in some populations variants with high oxygen affinity may be more frequent than expected but go undetected when conventional electrophoresis is used as the sole detection procedure.

polycythemia; erythrocytosis; Hb Coimbra; beta-globin gene


HUMAN AND MEDICAL GENETICS

SHORT COMMUNICATION

Polycythemia and Hb Coimbra [beta 99 (G1) Asp ® Glu] in Brazil

André FattoriI; Elza Miyuki KimuraII; Dulcinéia Martins de AlbuquerqueI; Satie Hatsushika OgoIII; Graziela Renata StoppaIII; Juliana Touquinha MartinsI; Carmen Silvia Passos LimaI; Sara Terezinha Ollala SaadI; Fernando Ferreira CostaI; Maria de Fátima SonatiII

IUniversidade Estadual de Campinas, Centro de Hematologia e Hemoterapia, Campinas, SP, Brazil

IIUniversidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Departamento de Patologia Clínica, Campinas, SP, Brazil

IIIUniversidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Biologia, Departamento de Bioquímica, Campinas, SP, Brazil

Send correspondence to Send correspondence to Maria de Fatima Sonati Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Departamento de Patologia Clínica Caixa Postal 6111, 13083-970 Campinas, SP, Brazil E-mail: sonati@fcm.unicamp.br.

ABSTRACT

We report the clinical and laboratory findings concerning three unrelated Brazilian patients investigated for polycythemia, whose definitive diagnosis could only be established after the presence of Hb Coimbra (b99 Asp ® Glu) was demonstrated. This illustrates the importance of properly investigating hereditary hemoglobinopathies in cases of erythrocytosis because in some populations variants with high oxygen affinity may be more frequent than expected but go undetected when conventional electrophoresis is used as the sole detection procedure.

Key words: polycythemia, erythrocytosis, Hb Coimbra, beta-globin gene.

Some rare structural hemoglobin (Hb) variants have been reported to be associated with functional abnormalities such as high oxygen affinity and a left shift in the Hb-oxygen dissociation curve, leading to tissue hypoxia and compensatory erythrocytosis (Bunn and Forget, 1986). At present, 84 Hb variants with high oxygen affinity have been documented, 77 of which contain b-chain residue replacements (Globin Gene Server Web Site, http://globin. cse.psu.edu). The majority of these variants have substitutions at one of the three crucial regions for Hb stability and function, the a1b2 interface, the b chain C-terminal end and the 2,3-DPG binding site (Bunn and Forget, 1986; http://globin.cse.psu.edu). A particular mutation at codon 99 of the b-globin gene (GAT ® GAA) results in the replacement of aspartic acid for glutamic acid in the b-chain and has been associated with polycythemia, this variant having been named Hb Coimbra from the town of Coimbra in Portugal where it was first described by Tamagnini et al. (1991).

In this paper we report the clinical and laboratory findings for three unrelated patients investigated for polycythemia at the University of Campinas (UNICAMP) University Hospital, in Campinas, São Paulo state, southeastern Brazil. The definitive diagnosis for these patients could only be established after the presence of Hb Coimbra was demonstrated.

The patients were as follows: Patient 1. G.P.P., a 68-year-old female of German descent, was advised to undergo examination after routine laboratory tests revealed a high hematocrit (Hct) value. The patient had no health complaints and no other previously diagnosed diseases. At physical examination, only a ruddy facial color was observed and the cause of the elevated Hct value could not be determined. Hemoglobin electrophoresis and solubility and stability tests were all normal. However, Hb analysis by HPLC (Variant II, BioRad, USA) showed an abnormally enlarged peak in the Hb A position and the same HPLC profile was observed in the patient’s 48-year-old son, who was asymptomatic. Patient 2. A.T., a 49-year-old male of Portuguese ancestry sought health care because of pruritus, visual disturbances and an unusual red coloration of his cheeks, ears, nose and neck. He had been a regular blood donor for the previous 13 years, since phlebotomy made him feel better. Blood tests showed a high Hct and Hb investigation revealed a normal electrophoretic profile and a HPLC chromatogram similar to that observed in patient 1. Patient 3. R.H.C, a 13-year-old male of German descent who was initially referred to the Pediatrics Department presenting with impaired neuropsychomotor development due to congenital toxoplasmosis, and microcytic and hypochromic anemia (ferritin = 9.6 ng mL-1). The HPLC chromatogram of this patient and his mother was similar to those of patients 1 and 2. The hematological data on all these individuals are shown in Table 1.

Hemoglobin functional analyses were performed according to Rossi-Fanelli and Antonini, (1958). Since the variant could not be separated from normal Hb A, total hemolysate (in the stripped form and in the presence of organic polyphosphates) was analyzed. In a preliminary test, oxygen affinity, measured in the absence of anionic cofactors, was higher than that of stripped Hb A: the P50 value was 0.76 mm Hg, while the P50 of Hb A was 2.52 mm Hg, when studied under the same conditions (pH 7.0, 20 °C). The Hill coefficient (n) was reduced to about 1.5 at pH 7.0; however, this n value did not reflect cooperativity, since total hemolysate was used, i.e., a mixture of two hemoglobins of widely different oxygen affinities. Upon addition of organic phosphates (inositol hexaphosphate - IHP), the P50 value increased to 2.35 mm Hg at pH 7.0 (HbA P50 = 32.0 mmHg), demonstrating a small change in oxygen affinity of the total hemolysate.

For molecular genetic analyses, genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood using the Blood Purification Kit (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA). A 661 bp fragment of the b-globin gene (from position -140, relative to the Cap site, to position +521, at the beginning of IVS-II) was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using the primers described by Miranda et al. (1997). Direct sequencing of the PCR products was performed using the BigDyeTM Terminator Cycle sequencing Kit and the ABI PRISMTM 377 Genetic Analyser (PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City-CA, USA). A single base substitution at codon 99 of the b-globin gene, corresponding to Hb Coimbra (GAT ® GAA), was detected in heterozygosis in all individuals investigated (Patient 1 and her son, Patient 2, Patient 3 and his mother).

The b-globin gene cluster haplotypes were determined, by genotyping restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) in and around the b-globin-like genes: Hind III - 5’ Gg, Hind III - 5’ Ag, Hinc II - 5’yb, Hinc II - 3’yb, Ava II - 3’b and BamH I - 3’b (Antonarakis et al., 1982; Orkin et al., 1982; Sutton et al., 1989; Lee et al., 2002). The results are shown in Figure 1. The association between the b-haplotype (- - - - - +) and the Hb Coimbra mutation could be established in Patient 3. Data on Patients 1 and 2 also make this association a possibility.


The nucleotide substitution (GAT ® GAA) at the 99th codon of the b-globin gene, detected in our patients is responsible for the previously described Hb Coimbra. This point mutation was first described in a Portuguese family (Tamagnini et al., 1991), and later in several members of a German family and in an American-German family in Michigan, USA (http://globin.cse.psu.edu). It is noteworthy that our Patients 1 and 3 have German ancestry, while Patient 2 was of Portuguese descent. The b-haplotype (- - - - - +), common in normal Mediterranean populations (Orkin et al., 1982), was found to be associated with the mutation in Patient 3. Since it may also be the case in the other two patients, a common origin for this mutation in the three Brazilian families is a possibility. Data on the association of the b-haplotype and Hb-Coimbra both in our population and in European families are not available.

Human Hb normally interacts with organic polyphosphates (Chanutin and Curnish, 1967). The physiological implication of the Asp ® Glu in Hb Coimbra is the weakening of the interaction of anionic cofactor, leading to increased Hb synthesis in order to compensate for low tissues oxygenation (Reed et al., 1968; Nagai et al., 1982). Currently, seven mutations at the b99Asp are known: Hb Kempsey (Asp ® Asn), Hb Yakima (Asp ® His), Hb Radcliffe (Asp ® Ala), Hb Ypsilanti (Asp ® Tyr), Hb Hotel-Dieu (Asp ® Gly), Hb Chemilly (Asp ® Val) and Hb Coimbra (Asp ® Glu) (http://globin.cse.psu.edu; Tamagnini et al., 1991). Variable degrees of oxygen affinity demonstrate a 25 to 60 percent decrease in the Bohr effect, and all cases were characterized clinically by erythrocytosis. Interestingly, despite the fact that Patient 3 and his mother had high erythrocyte counts they did not present high Hct levels or clinical complaints.

Our findings demonstrate the importance of investigating Hb variants when erythrocytosis is detected. Although conventional Hb electrophoresis did not show a distinctive profile for Hb Coimbra, the HPLC methodology allowed its detection. Functional studies and molecular analyses were also effective.

Acknowledgements

We thank the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) for financial support (Grant 02/13801-7).

Received: January 10, 2005; Accepted: September 19, 2005.

Associate Editor: Angela M. Vianna-Morgante

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  • Send correspondence to
    Maria de Fatima Sonati
    Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Departamento de Patologia Clínica
    Caixa Postal 6111, 13083-970
    Campinas, SP, Brazil
    E-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      12 June 2006
    • Date of issue
      2006

    History

    • Accepted
      19 Sept 2005
    • Received
      10 Jan 2005
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    E-mail: editor@gmb.org.br